How to level a piece of ground for turfing
-
- Posts: 44
- Joined: Sun Jun 17, 2007 11:56 am
- Location: Surrey
Hi,
I have just finished excavating an area of land and have made it fairly flat. I mainly just used a 1.5t mini-digger and the bull-dozer bit on the front of it. Now, however, I need to get it much flatter in order to lay turf.
Is there any tool or plant that will help me to do this other than a shovel and rake? I have heard of people using bobcats or sod-cutters, but I'm not sure these would really be much better than a mini-digger (as it is already fairly flat).
Many thanks,
Ramsey
I have just finished excavating an area of land and have made it fairly flat. I mainly just used a 1.5t mini-digger and the bull-dozer bit on the front of it. Now, however, I need to get it much flatter in order to lay turf.
Is there any tool or plant that will help me to do this other than a shovel and rake? I have heard of people using bobcats or sod-cutters, but I'm not sure these would really be much better than a mini-digger (as it is already fairly flat).
Many thanks,
Ramsey
Ramsey
-
- Posts: 1990
- Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 10:49 pm
- Location: N/Ireland
Wait till the spring and rotavate it bobcats etc are too heavy to put onto soil at this time of year and will compact the ground so that water won't drain freely. Your digger has probably damaged the soil structure already so it will need rotavating anyway. Plant machinery takes a lot of skill to do this sort of thing even when conditions are perfect.
Can't see it from my house
-
- Posts: 127
- Joined: Mon Nov 05, 2007 5:37 pm
- Location: Surrey
- Contact:
Shovel and big landscaping rake is all I can think of but if you use a rotorvator on it first it would help to loosen up the soil and make it easier to rake. either that or grade it out with the bucket of your machine. Think a bobcat would make a lot of mess..
ooo0
( ) 0ooo
\ ( ( )
\_) ) /
(_/
I've just screeded that!!!!!!!
( ) 0ooo
\ ( ( )
\_) ) /
(_/
I've just screeded that!!!!!!!
-
- Posts: 75
- Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2006 5:06 pm
- Location: Chester
-
- Posts: 46
- Joined: Sun Mar 18, 2007 9:49 am
- Location: Weston Super Mare
What you really need is one of these....
Powerharrow
Powerharrow
-
- Posts: 1990
- Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2007 10:49 pm
- Location: N/Ireland
-
- Site Admin
- Posts: 4713
- Joined: Mon Jun 26, 2006 11:01 am
- Location: eastbourne
I watched a gardener a few years ago. He had an old ladder 3 metres long, he weighted it down with a couple of blocks, tied two pieces of rope to it. He pulled it up and down, back and forth till it was level. It seemed hard work ( isn't it always? ) but it did a good job. He said " it had to be the one with the rebated square edge"
sean
-
- Posts: 637
- Joined: Sat Mar 18, 2006 7:35 pm
- Location: Edinburgh
At work we have 2 machines similar to what Artisan posted, we have the cultivator and the power harrow, both are good in their own right but they dont take the need away for rakes. If it is very tough ground we run over it with the cultivator and then break up the lumps and roughly level off with the harrows. Only problem with out cultivator is its a metre wide - too wide to drive through almost all residential gates. And taking the head off of it to lift it in is just a pain in the arse.
-
- Posts: 75
- Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2006 5:06 pm
- Location: Chester
Thats simliar to what we do, after its been turned over broken up and compacted.seanandruby wrote:I watched a gardener a few years ago. He had an old ladder 3 metres long, he weighted it down with a couple of blocks, tied two pieces of rope to it. He pulled it up and down, back and forth till it was level. It seemed hard work ( isn't it always? ) but it did a good job. He said " it had to be the one with the rebated square edge"
Use a 14' of 6x2 pull down and drag it across with two or three men on it....looks lovely on the eye when its turfed.